Often that's true, but not always. I'll have to restate my earlier post: Sometimes a bald opinion is as far as you can go, because it's not clear where it comes from or whether it's right to hold, and contrary opinions don't have any clear way of contradicting it, but instead they coexist. This problem does apply to facts too, because at some point the explanations run out. Some call this the Munchausen Trilemma - because some serious people think that resorting to an opinion in an argument is as nonsensical as the fictional story of the Baron getting his horse out of the mud by pulling upwards on his hair. (I also think these problems have a connection to Kurt Godel's incompleteness theorem.)BulletMagnet wrote:What I like to remind people is that any opinion, especially on a matter of some import, is completely worthless unless you are able to explain, in an objective, fact-based manner, why you have come to hold that particular opinion instead of another one. "Opinions" as they apply to arguments of this type are not inscrutable, mysterious feelings that nobody else could possibly understand; they are conclusions reached after a considerable amount of observation, contemplation, and research. If you are unwilling or unable to justify your "opinion" beyond the point of "it's my opinion", then you haven't put anywhere near enough thought into your position (which is a word I'd like to see replace "opinion" in a lot of these situations) on that particular subject.Mischief Maker wrote:I fucking HATE people who, when they start losing the argument, begin prefacing their posts with a paragraph (or three) explaining that people have these things that are called "opinions" and then proceed to explain social rules revolving around them (did you know everyone has a right to their opinions???) and blah, blah, blah...
One example of the problem, though many people hate to admit it, is the deist vs. atheist debate. There are lots of opinions and even some evidence that there isn't a being behind creation, but ultimately there is no conclusive proof either way; you can't take the evidence far enough. Note the difference here between inductive and deductive reasoning; you can't deduce that there isn't a god from the available evidence, though you can induce it.